Get ready, Banksy fans - from tomorrow, you can reserve a night's stay at the artist's latest masterpiece.

The Walled Off Hotel, packed with creative genius by the elusive Bristol graffiti artist, is taking bookings from Saturday morning.

Bunkbeds at Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

The budget bunk beds, decorated with surplus items from an Israeli military barracks, offers minimal frills, includes locker, personal safe, shared bathroom, and complimentary earplugs. To stay in one of these it will only set you back $30 (around £24.50).

Shared bathroom at Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

And for the more upmarket travellers, there is luxurious presidential suite where water runs from a bullet-strafed water tank into a hot tub.

Hot Tub at Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

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Billed as being "equipped with everything a corrupt head of state would need", it has a plunge bath able to accommodate up to four revellers, original artwork, a library, home cinema, roof garden and tiki bar.

Presidential suite at Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

And perhaps the most interesting are the artists' rooms. So far Banksy, Sami Musa and Dominique Petrin have customised guest rooms, but more are promised to follow.

Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

The 'Banksy room' showcases a huge mural displaying a masked Palestinian and an Israeli soldier having a pillow fight over a king-sized bed.

The Banksy Room at Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

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The hotel's piano bar is one of the most spectacular rooms in the building. Its theme is based on the era that, to quote Banksy's website, "Britain got its hands on Palestine" in 1917. Guests will be served tea and scones and the hotel's "Walled Off Salad".

The website says: "It is equipped with ceiling fans, leather bound couches and an air of undeserved authority."

Guests can peruse a collection of Banksy artworks that include vandalised oil paintings and statues choking on tear gas fumes.

Piano Bar at Banksy's Walled Off Hotel

Greeting visitors as they arrive is a life-size figure of former British Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour signing his 1917 letter, the Balfour Declaration, which committed the UK to supporting "the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people". It was a key moment in the process which led to the creation of the state of Israel and viewed as a violation of previous agreements by Arab leaders who were supporting the Allies against the Ottoman empire during the First World War.